Your labs are normal. But you feel anything but. You are waking at 2 a.m., forcing yourself through meetings, wondering where your drive and desire went. You hear, “This is just getting older” or “Everything looks fine,” yet your body is clearly sending different messages.
Testosterone is rarely mentioned in these conversations, especially for women in their 40s and 50s. At our hormone replacement clinic in Vancouver, we talk about it a lot, because it often explains that “flat” feeling that is hard to put into words. Let’s walk through what testosterone really does in women, how it changes in perimenopause and menopause, and how it can be used carefully as part of a thoughtful, data-informed plan.
When “Normal” Labs Do Not Match How You Feel
Many high-performing women come in with a thick folder of “normal” labs. Thyroid, fine. Basic hormones, “within range.” Yet they report:
- Sleep that is shallow or broken
- Declining focus or mental sharpness
- Low or missing libido
- Body changes around the midsection
The disconnect is painful. Standard screening often skips detailed androgen testing, and even when testosterone is checked, results are usually interpreted only as “normal or not,” without considering symptoms or free hormone levels.
In this article, we are focusing on testosterone not as a magic fix, but as one important piece in a larger hormonal picture. Our goal is to explain what it actually does for women and how a hormone replacement clinic in Vancouver might use it in a precise, individualized way.
What Testosterone Really Does in Women’s Bodies
Testosterone is not just a “male hormone.” Women make it too, in smaller amounts, and it influences how you feel in more ways than sex drive.
Testosterone helps support:
- Steady physical energy and motivation
- Cognitive sharpness and decisiveness
- Muscle maintenance and strength
- Bone support along with estrogen
- Sexual desire, arousal, and pleasure
Women produce testosterone in the ovaries and adrenal glands. Levels often begin to shift in the late 30s or 40s, sometimes before estrogen has clearly dropped. This can create a type of “low gear” feeling that is easy to blame on stress or schedule.
There is a difference between being tired from a very full life and feeling like your inner drive is gone. Androgen deficiency in women can show up as slower recovery after workouts, needing more effort to start tasks, and a “dimmer switch” on libido. You might still want connection, but your body is not responding the way it used to.
Perimenopause, Menopause, and Androgen Changes
Perimenopause is the transition when estrogen and progesterone fluctuate. Bleeding patterns change, sleep shifts, and mood can feel less stable. Menopause is the stage after a full year without a period, when hormone levels are more steady but overall lower.
Across this time:
- Estrogen and progesterone rise and fall, then settle at lower levels
- Testosterone and DHEA often trend downward more gradually
- The balance among these hormones changes, not just the absolute numbers
Symptom clusters that may relate to lower or suboptimal androgens include:
- Less spontaneous sexual desire and weaker arousal
- Reduced sensitivity or pleasure during intimacy
- Loss of strength or power with the same amount of exercise
- Decreased stamina and slower recovery
- More fat around the abdomen
- Brain fog that is not fully explained by poor sleep
These symptoms are never caused by testosterone alone. Sleep quality, mood, thyroid function, insulin resistance, HPA axis function, and chronic stress all interact with how testosterone feels in your body. Good care looks at the whole pattern, not just one hormone.
Why “Normal” Testosterone Is Not Always Optimal
Lab reference ranges are built from large groups of people. “Normal” on a report means “within this population range,” not “ideal for you” or “where you personally feel your best.”
Two key points matter here:
- Total testosterone measures all testosterone in the blood
- Free testosterone measures the portion not tightly bound to proteins and more available to your tissues
Sex hormone binding globulin, or SHBG, is a protein that holds on to hormones. When SHBG is high, free testosterone can be low, even if total testosterone looks fine. SHBG can be increased by factors like:
- Oral birth control
- Estrogen therapy, especially oral forms
- Thyroid status
- Certain medications or health conditions
This is why a woman can be told her testosterone is normal, yet her free, active amount is low for her. It is also important to clear up some myths:
- Testosterone is not only about sex
- Women do not need “male level” doses to feel better
- Chasing one lab number without context rarely works
What matters is the combination of symptoms, total and free hormone levels, other lab markers, and your stage in the perimenopause or menopause transition.
How We Evaluate and Use Testosterone Thoughtfully
At Prevail Wellness Center, we start with your story, not just your labs. A symptom-first approach means we ask about:
- Physical changes: energy, stamina, strength, recovery
- Cognitive shifts: focus, memory, mental drive
- Sexual function: desire, arousal, satisfaction, discomfort
- Emotional tone: motivation, resilience, irritability
Then we use targeted lab testing to clarify what is going on. Depending on your situation, this may include:
- Total and free testosterone and SHBG
- Estradiol and progesterone
- DHEA-S
- Thyroid panel
- Fasting glucose, insulin or other markers of insulin resistance
- Lipids and liver function when needed
We interpret these results in context. That includes where you are in the transition, medications like oral contraceptives or SSRIs, thyroid replacement, alcohol intake, sleep patterns, and overall stress load.
When we add testosterone as part of bioidentical hormone replacement therapy, we usually:
- Stabilize estrogen and progesterone first, often with topical 17-beta estradiol and oral micronized progesterone
- Use the lowest effective dose of testosterone, targeted to physiologic female levels
- Prefer sublingual or topical testosterone, with carefully compounded options when individualization is appropriate
Our view on pellets is measured. We do not use testosterone pellets because they cannot be adjusted once placed and can create peaks that are harder to manage. We prefer forms that can be titrated and changed as we learn how your body responds.
Monitoring, Adjusting, and Keeping Safety at the Center
Testosterone therapy, when indicated, is not a “set it and forget it” treatment. We usually plan an initial trial period and explain that shifts may be subtle at first. Many women notice:
- Slight changes in mental drive or motivation
- A bit more spontaneous desire or responsiveness
- Better workout recovery or strength over time
We schedule structured follow-ups to:
- Repeat labs, including total and free testosterone, SHBG, and estradiol
- Review lipids and liver function as appropriate
- Reassess symptoms in each domain, not just libido
Safety means staying in a physiologic female range and watching for side effects like skin changes, unwanted hair growth, mood shifts, or bleeding changes when other hormones are involved. If any of these show up, we adjust the dose, change the form, or pause therapy.
Our care model is integrative and high-touch. We expect to refine and adjust, not hand over one prescription and declare the work done. For women who feel dismissed by “normal” labs, a more precise, lab-guided approach can finally align how they feel with the life they are working so hard to live.
Restore Your Hormone Balance And Feel Like Yourself Again
If you are ready to address fatigue, mood changes, or stubborn weight gain at the root, our team at Prevail Wellness Center is here to help you take the next step. We use hormone replacement therapy in Vancouver, WA to personalize your treatment so it fits your health history, goals, and lifestyle. Schedule a consultation today so we can review your symptoms, lab work, and options together. If you have questions or need help booking, simply contact us and we will guide you through the process.